OneWorld.net note: With a government ban on non-governmental organizations recently lifted, a major international aid agency plans to resume food aid to Zimbabwean school children and launch livelihood training and an agricultural recovery program.
Zimbabwean girl partaking in a rural nutrition initiative. © GlobalGiving"Zimbabwe has become one of the tragedies of modern Africa, the government incompetent to manage hyper-inflation and unwilling to heed advice. Normal social and economic activity is swallowed up by survival strategies and 40% of Zimbabwe's population is likely to require food aid in 2009. The political mediation process led by President Mbeki of South Africa has failed totally to prevent the octogenarian president Robert Mugabe from unleashing his well-oiled machinery of state violence to obliterate the electoral capacity of his opponent, Morgan Tsvangirai," says OneWorld UK. For more information about human rights, politics, and development in Zimbabwe, visit OneWorld UK's Zimbabwe country guide.
Yesterday, Zimbabwean President Mugabe and opposition leader Tsvangirai concluded a power-sharing deal that may finally put an end to months of negotiations and years of political and economic turmoil bordering on humanitarian disaster.
From: World Vision
Agency's top priority is reaching out to the most vulnerable communities, especially children
About 400,000 school children are to be reached by food aid in the supplementary school feeding program
World Vision's development projects involves community mobilization, such as livelihood training and workshops, will re-start immediately
Washington, D.C., September 2, 2008 -Zimbabwe's largest humanitarian aid agency, World Vision, will resume humanitarian relief and development operations this week following the lifting of a suspension order that was declared in June.
"We are going to resume our operations immediately and comply with the ministry's demands, and our priority is to reach out to vulnerable communities, especially children, with minimum delay," said Leslie Scott, national director of World Vision Zimbabwe.
Dialogue is taking place with communities to identify the most vulnerable children in need of assistance.
Relief operations that had some partial activities underway during the suspension are expected to scale up, and target about 700,000 beneficiaries with various food aid interventions, through the C-SAFE program funded by USAID.
"We are looking to move about 4,000 metric tons of food, and this has already started mainly in schools ahead of the third term, where we are targeting 400,000 school children with supplementary feeding," said Edward Brown, C-SAFE chief of party.
"An additional 200,000 beneficiaries are being drawn from the Market Assistance Program and the remaining 100,000 from smaller programs like the institutional feeding of the elderly and chronically ill," noted Brown.
In addition, planning is underway to launch the safety net program, which will target over 1 million beneficiaries during the ‘hunger period' between October and January with food aid.
"We expect to launch the safety net program, which will include food for asset projects, in October, as we are still to conduct preparatory exercises like beneficiary registration and verification before we do the actual distribution," said Brown.
ll other development projects involving community mobilization like livelihood training and workshops are set to start immediately. World Vision has 72, 258 children in the sponsorship program.
Other outstanding projects within World Vision's agricultural recovery program and water and sanitation are also being tapped for completion.
It is projected that between July and September 2008, 2.04 million people will be food insecure, while 5.1 million people in both rural and urban areas will be food insecure at the height of the hungry season between January and March 2009 and in urgent need of food aid, according to the Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) and the World Food Program (WFP) Crop and Food Assessment Mission in Zimbabwe released in June 2008.
World Vision also runs recovery programs in food security, water and sanitation and HIV and AIDS through the support of various donors.
For more information on the food crisis in Zimbabwe, visit World Vision.